More User Reviews:

Pours a brilliant deep golden with an amber hue,a leafy aroma up front and some nice fruitiness a good mix of hop and malt quite well balanced but a little subdued.Taste is quite hoppy and herbal malt comes thru more as I drink more with some dried fruit and biscuit.A real solid easy drinking well rounded beer I could sit in a pub and drink this all night.A fitting ale for the late October night.

Appearance: Light amber with a hint of haze, lace is creamy and stay in formation for a while

Smell: Quite aromatic of fermented grain, herbal hop, light diacetyl and some fruit mixed in for good measure.

Taste: Chewy malt, bready/grainy, a touch of yeast mingle with a semi-herbal hop bitterness that rides the back of the crisp carbonation. More malt sweetness comes through in the middle with some mild fruit, faded buttery diacetyl and grain. The even hop bitterness and flavour helps while it lingers into the finish with some drying grain.

Notes: Very tasty, malt flavours pull through ... great hop finish. This is great example of a "real" Pale Ale.

A 500ml bottle with a BB of July 2013. Picked up a while back from a supermarket. The label describes it as a light golden beer.

Poured into a straight pint glass. A hazy amber hue with faint sediment and medium carbonation. Yields a large head of creamy white foam that lasts for a few minutes before reducing to a surface layer. Nice lacing. Aroma of caramel malt with hints of grain, fruity ale yeast, grass/hay, stewed hops and mild cardboard. OK but uninspired.

Tastes of caramel malt with a dry finish. Notes of faint grain, fruity ale yeast, grass/hay, stewed hops, cardboard and earthiness. Well-attenuated and slightly harsh, followed by a restrained, leafy bitterness upon swallowing. Mouthfeel is smooth, dry and lightly tingly, with pleasant carbonation and decent body. Somewhat astringent, with an aftertaste of harsh stewed leaves and fruity yeast esters.

A fairly average ale - drinkable but nowt special. Looks pretty good, but the aroma and flavour are quite bland and uninteresting. Body is alright. Given the reviews from others who rate it highly, I might try and re-review again sometime. Goes down easily enough, however there's no need to seek it out.

Clearish medium amber appearance with a speckly head that levels flat but doesn't stick around long. Simple partial string lace, but ample. Nice deep malty aroma, floral honey and distinct ripening nectarine quality. Very fruity flavor, mature and fleshy with some cherry tone to add to the mix. Smooth mouthfeel, carbonation is minimal. Bittering is restrained, crocus-like flowery, slight mustiness at the close. Finish is a little sweet but this is a pleasant beer, a nice contrast to American Pales. The fruitiness stands out as the most singular characteristic.

Quite the rare find I picked up down in Maryland on a little jaunt down to the Deep Creek Brewing a few weeks back. Appearance on this one pours a really appeasing copper amber hue with a nice caramel of white creamy head leaving behind a full collared lacing. Aromatics contain biscuit malts a pleasant herbal flow a bit of a spiciness something about it is just nice and a tad of a butterscotch tone running through it, overall mild and reserved but the beautiful thing about this beer is the balance. Taste mildy hopped but the silky butterscotch tone blended with a malt sweetness just ties it all together pure session ale very nice authentic British pale ale. Mouthfeel is medium to light bodied mild even carbonation, a silky smooth texture adds to the overall enjoyment level of sipping on this brew. Drinkability: Session brew not amazing but very solid would like to try this one on cask.

A hazy medium-dark golden color, this brew exhibits a constant bubbling activity after a nice cascade, which helps to form a solid off-white head about a finger in height. The head displays good retention and remains in patches well down the glass.
The aroma offers up a good mix of malts and hops, bready and bit fruity with a bit of sweetness in the malts contrasted by earthy, herbal/leafy and floral hops character. The nose is a 4.0 but for a strong graininess and a sort of fading off a bit in.
The flavor is good, following suit, but a grainy character that's evident at first gets stronger and eventually detracts. Otherwise, aside from the balance of breads and fruits with leaf and earth, this is quite lemony.
The body is on the light side of medium, and the balance in the flavor is also in the semi-dry mouthfeel. It's not extremely crisp or smooth, but it's got both elements.

Taste - A lot of honey on the tongue, with light breadiness. Hops are subdued, coming through with a touch of floral character and a faint citrus undertone. Mild toffee, apple-ish esters and a bit of buttery diacetyl come through toward the finish, helping to bring a bit of balance to the sweetness, but not enough to keep from becoming a bit cloying.

Overall - Hard to determine how old this is given the cryptic bottling code, but I am not enjoying it as is, and until breweries start marking their beers with simple coding, I will treat beers as 'good to drink'. It's 2015, and there's no reason not to bottle date your beers in a fashion that consumers can easily read unless you have something to hide. Sorry Moorhouse's but your EPA, as I tried it, is not impressive.

Murky, darkened peach topped with whipped French Vanilla.
The nose displays buttered biscuits, rust, strawberry esters, and sandstone.
Enters the mouth with a dashing doughiness. Bagel hues are touched upon, then it settles to gently toasted English muffins with the requisite butter. Fruitiness is secondary, and as appealing as it is ephemeral. Red apples, and peaches, and strawberries, and green raisins all take their turns. It's not all sweet either; each fruit brings with it some tart tones. Toffee is in the background initially, but steps forward as it warms. Hopping is grassy and iron-spiked, with a tepid bitterness and more persuasive fruited tea notes.
The light body opens up more toward medium as it rests.
This is an English Pale that showcases a facsinating malt-house yeast interplay. Don't stop here if you've come for hops.

Comes in a very long-necked 500ml bottle, though the label has changed from the image posted here. Now it's a gold and purple label with a silhouette of a witch on a broom.
Pours a slightly amberish golden color with a small white head that has very little retention. Almost no carbonation. Pleasant aroma of light floral hops, honey, and clean ale yeast. Interesting palate holds notes of floral hops, biscuit, light honey, and apple, held together by a fairly sturdy light sweet malt. The hops become a bit more evident towards the back of the mouth. Mouthfeel is slightly foamy. A good beer for celebrating Guy Fawkes Day.

A very nice and mellow brew- hints of dark sugar and molasses. Had a nice aroma, reminded me of when I drank one of my first ales. Very warming and inviting without being too heavy or trying to make more of itself than it is. Just a good beer, typical of English syle and quality.

A heavy fig smell, mixed in with some lemon pepper, toffee & stadium peanuts of all things. :)

A lot of toffee & peanut skins & shells in the taste. Extra butter & caramel creep up & make things a little slippery going down. A quiet, leafy edge of hops hides around every corner. The alcohol is even
quieter.

The almost hearty body was unexpected, but very satisfying to bite through. A constant rim of foam was always present, even at my last sip.

Considering the mildness of it all, it was amazing to taste so many things pop out at once. I came in expecting a stale, Atlantic-logged brew, but things turned out much different. Thought the price doesn't agree with me, my taste buds certainly do. :)

Poured a nice amber with a creamy, rich head that clung forever. The smell was oddly malt focused with only a tiny bit of hops. The flavor was incredibly yeasty, way too much so. I couldn't taste much other than an overpowering yeast and bready flavor that I didn't really enjoy. I'll skip this one next time.

My local store stocks up on some Halloween theme beers every year, primarily the Wytchwood line. Lately they picked up the Bayhawk/Reaper beers, and now this. I hesitated to buy it - a bit pricey and you never know if you are getting a gimmick beer or the real deal. Here, this is a worthy beer.

Poured a hazy apple cider amber orange. Fizzy head that quickly settled. Not much aroma, which is the primary ding against it. Flavor is very bright, a touch of apple mixed in the malt. A bit acidic, with a mildly tart and clean finish. A soft bitterness hangs at the back of the tongue. Good drinkability - a quaffer.